miércoles, 26 de febrero de 2014

Indiana Review
has just opened up submissions for a poetry prize with Eileen Myles as this
year’s judge. Myles is a Boston born U.S. poet and author who has produced more than twenty volumes of
poetry, fiction, nonfiction, libretti, plays and performance pieces, and has
received a Guggenheim Fellowship to complete Afterglow (a memoir), a
real as well as fantastic account of a dog’s life.

The
poetry contest opened on February first and closes on April 1, 2014, awarding
$1,000 for first prize and publication in the magazine. Poets should check the guidelines
at http://indianareview.org/submit/.

Indiana Review, a
biannual literary review now in its thirty-seventh year of publication, is a non-profit
magazine dedicated to bringing out the talents of new or established writers.
IR seeks high quality writing on a wide aesthetic spectrum.

Writers
interested in participating in the magazine’s literary contests, or in its high
level content, are welcome to contact the magazine.

lunes, 24 de febrero de 2014

Barry Kornhauser’s life and passion is the
stage, yet it seemed appropriate to start the interview in a more mundane way,
so after shaking hands I said bluntly: “Hello Barry! Nice office you have here…Well,
just to get started: who is Barry Kornhauser?”

That’s a good one! But tell me this: what led you into the labyrinth of
theater?

I did not come to it early, having had few positive
theatrical experiences where I grew up in urban New Jersey. In fact, my school
mates and I were such bad audiences when taken to a student matinee of a play
that we were effectively banned from most East Coast theaters for years. It
wasn’t until I was a junior in high school during the Vietnam War era and was
taken to a production of Henry V at Stratford in Connecticut that was staged
brilliantly as an anti-war piece that I realized the potential power of the art
to transform lives and the excitement possible in its presentation.
Interestingly, that play was directed by a young man named Michael Kahn who
went on to become the Artistic Director of the Tony Award-winning Shakespeare
Theater in Washington, DC. And some 30 years after my being so deeply touched
by his Henry V, he chose to direct my adaptation of CYRANO DE BERGEAC at The
Shakespeare Theater. The production went on to sweep the Helen Hayes Awards
that year, winning both Best Play but also Best Director for Michael, so I felt
in some small strange way I finally got to thank him for drawing me to theater.

What is theater for you and what tendency or school of acting do you
prefer?

Oscar Wilde once wrote: “The stage is not
merely the meeting place of all the arts, but is also the return of art to
life.” I think that beautifully captures what theater means to me, a place
where all of the arts come together to explore humanity, and because it is live
and visceral, when well done it can touch our lives like no other art form. I
am not an actor myself, but I do like another quote made years ago by an
American politician. He wrote: “I am a man of fixed and unbending principles,
and my first fixed and unbending principal is to remain flexible at all times.”
I believe this applies to schools of acting as much as anything else. I would
say you should use whatever works for you, being flexible enough to take avail
of practices from different approaches for different times and circumstances. A
little bit of this, a little bit of that—good ingredients for cooking up a tasty
character.

Would you agree that theater training is not only a tool for preparing
shows: it is also a valuable tool used uo open up creativity, to help disabled
people deal with their specific problems, a means for bringing about social
integration…

But don’t forget that people living with
disabilities have so much to offer the arts. Because they are often compelled
to live creative lives every day just to do what non-disabled people consider
routine, folks with disabilities have a great deal to bring to the artistic
table. By welcoming to that table, we enhance and enrich the art we present.

Could you describe your own work with young people of diverse
backgrounds and nationalities?

More than 25 years ago I founded and still
direct a youth theater program comprised of marginalized, disadvantaged,
at-risk teens and those living with physical, sensory, and/or cognitive
disabilities. They are referred to the program from juvenile probation offices,
psychiatric hospitals, drug and alcohol centers, homeless shelters, refugee
organizations, and school counselors. They create and perform original dramatic
work based on social justice themes that have impacted their lives or that of
their peers globally. The program has received numerous grants including from
the National Endownment for the Arts and has been honored at the White House by
the President’s Committee on the Arts & Humanities. Now working at
Millersville University in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, we have begun to build more
such arts programming—both performing and visual—for underserved people of all
ages in our community.

So you work not only with words, but with the body, not only the body
but with images which flow from different social, cultural and political
contexts…

All great fodder for art. Why on earth would
we want to limit our stage vocabulary to the spoken work—whatever the language?
We know from Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences notion, that we all learn differently,
so why not present our work in multiple “languages”—not just text but through
movement and image. Differing social, cultural and political contexts only
compound the need to reach out artistically in many diverse ways.

Racism and discrimination of diverse sorts are latent points of tension
in society, as A. Boal suggests. Do you believe that these and other social
problems can be understood more profoundly by means of role play and eventually
contact with an audience incorporated actively into the creative process?

Totally. I can think of no better way to
examine such issues and to transform thinking about them than through some of
the Theater of the Oppressed techniques developed by Boal, and certainly a good
part of what makes that work such a potentially powerful driver of social
change is the active involvement of the “audience” in the creative process. His
use of the “spectactor” rather than just the “spectator” makes all the
difference for is it not indeed true that we learn best by doing, not just
watching or listening.

In Lancaster and in the U.S.A. today are there any exciting vanguard
movements? Is theater and art perceived as a refuge to the finalcial crisis and
the twitchings of the consumer society?

For a mid-sized city, Lancaster has a
remarkably large arts community. There is a clear recognition that arts
programming does indeed serve as a financial driver bringing more people to the
area and improving everyone’s quality of life. It’s exciting to live in a place
this size that gets it! And what is nice about its size is that there are 100 +
arts venues all within walking distance and artists know each other and can and
do work together creating some exciting projects such as an event called “36
Dramatic Situations” in which a dozen different artists and arts organizations
collaborated to create an evening of five minute pieces each in their own art
form around an exhibit of themed art work by a local visual artist, a
three-year project. Lancaster City is the home of three performing arts centers
as well as theaters, galleries, etc. and the Pennsylvania College of Art &
Design as well as Franklin & Marshall College and Millersville University.
The city just hosted its first national Roots & Blues Music Festival and
more such events occur more and more regularly. It is also the home of the
Poetry Path, an art installation project all over the city combining poetry and
visual art works. That’s just the tip of the iceberg.

Are there any groups doing theatrical activities in other languages in
Lancaster or in the country?

Certainly in the country. Just a peek at the
pages of AMERICAN THEATRE Magazine will give one an idea of the breadth and
depth of the multiculturalism in America’s theater community. Not so much in
Lancaster as of yet. While the city itself is more than 38% Latino, there is
not a dedicated Spanish language theater. The same is true for the newer
immigrant groups from Asia and Africa who are just getting a footing in this
community. That said, here at Millersville University we are presenting
bi-lingual and Spanish-speaking artists for audiences of all ages. In fact, in
a few weeks the 3rd annual Latino Arts Festival will be held here
and in mid- April a Mexican theater company will come to Lancaster. This is
Sena y Verbo Teatro de Sordos, which is an inclusive ensemble compromised of
both hearing and deaf actors. So not only will we be hearing some Spanish, we’ll
also be seing some Mexican Sign Language.

Aside from your work at Millersville do you have any projects or plans
for the near future?

Millersville is keeping me happily busy with
many University arts programs that are quite exciting. Outside of that I’m
currently working on two play commissions—one for the Children’s Theatre
Company of Minneapolis, America’s flagship theater for young audiences program
and a Tony Award-winning regional theateritself. That play, BALLOONACY, is designed for early learners,
preschool-aged children and it will premiere in late March. The other is for a
theater in Pittsburgh. That is an adaptation of the award-winning Holocaust
novel THE DEVIL’S ARITHMETIC. Before its premiere in May we will actually be
doing a staged reading of excerpts from the script at Millersville University’s
biennial National Holocaust & Genocide Conference in early April with
university student actors. Beyond that I need to clean the gutters on my roof
and paint a bathroom!

Bio: BARRY KORNHAUSER recently joined the staff of
Millersville University to spearhead the school’s newly formed family arts
collaborative and to develop campus-community artistic initiatives. Prior
to this new endeavor, he served 30 years as the Playwright-In-Residence, TYA Director,
and sundry other positions at the National Historic Landmark Fulton Theatre in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Barry is a recipient of the American Alliance
for Theatre & Education (AATE) Charlotte Chorpenning Cup, honoring “a body
of distinguished work by a nationally known writer of outstanding plays for
children.” Other accolades include the Twin Cities’ Ivey Award for
Playwriting (Reeling), the Helen Hayes Outstanding Play Award (Cyrano),
Bonderman Prize (Worlds Apart), and two AATE Distinguished Play Awards (This
Is Not A Pipe Dream and Balloonacy), along with Pennsylvania’s “Best
Practices Honor” (for his HIV/AIDS prevention T.I.E. project, All It
Takes…) and the state’s first Educational Theatre Award “for outstanding
service by an individual for the advancement of theatre education in the
Commonwealth.” He has also received fellowships/grants from the National
Endowment for the Arts, TYA/USA, Doris Duke Foundation, MetLife Foundation,
Mid-Atlantic Arts, Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and Pennsylvania
Performing Artists on Tour (PennPAT). His plays have been commissioned and
produced by such Tony Award-winning theatres as the Alliance, Children’s
Theatre Company, La Jolla Playhouse, and Shakespeare Theatre, and have been
invited to such festivals as One Theatre World, NYC’s Provincetown Playhouse
New Plays for Young Audiences, the international Quest Fest, San Diego Theatre
of the World, the Bonderman, the Playground, and the Kennedy Center’s New
Visions/New Voices. The Kennedy also commissioned him to author a piece (Of
Mice And Manhattan) based on newly discovered children songs by Broadway
legend Frank Loesser, and invited him to take part in and report on its 2012
“International Convening of Thought Leaders in Theater, Dance, Disability, Education,
and Inclusion.” Barry is one of three playwrights (along with David Ives
and former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky) to be commissioned by The
Shakespeare Theatre to create new “American” adaptations of lesser-known
classic dramas. He has also served as a guest dramaturg at the Denver
Theatre Center. In 2008, Barry was selected as the United States nominee
for the “ASSITEJ International Award for Artistic Excellence” and his Youtheatre
program for at-risk teens and those living with disabilities was honored at
the White House as one of the nation’s top arts-education initiatives.
For his work with this ensemble, Barry also received the AATE’s 2011 Youth
Theatre Director of the Year Award. Over the years he has conducted theatre
residencies everywhere from a one-room Amish school house to universities
across the country, including several stints as the “Luminary Guest Artist” of
the University of New Mexico’s Wrinkle Writing program endowed by A Wrinkle
In Time author, Madeleine L’Engle. (He was the only guest artist
invited more than once). A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Franklin
& Marshall College, Barry has served on the TYA/USA board, various panels
of the NEA, the Heinz Endowment, and three state arts councils.
Currently, he is an AATE State Representative, a member of the Dramatists’
Guild, and sits on the board of the Lancaster Education Foundation. His
lovely wife Carol and great kids Ariel, Sam, and Max (with Turkish bride Sena)
complete his real-life cast of “characters.”

domingo, 23 de febrero de 2014

Loryn Spangler-Jones of Lancaster, Pennsylvania lives in a rainbow of
female colors. In a chat with Jaquematepress she explained: “I needed to fix
me, learn how to make myself happy from the inside out.” That’s what painting
is for her, a process that flows from the innermost reaches of the self. Self taught, she came upon art, not as an
inheritance, not as the result of academic study; rather it appeared when her
creative intuition found a means of expression.

“I started experimenting with paint and color in 1997 as a means of self
discovery and liberated self expression,” she points out in a statement on her
art. “I quickly learned mixing mediums within my work added both complexity and
depth to each individual piece.”

Much of her inspiration comes from her personal experiences as a woman, “deconstructing
the societal bondage of oppression and silence.” That meant venturing into an “unknown
territory within the corners of myself, shedding layers of fear and doubt and
embracing my own vulnerability and sensuality…”

Your
paintings reveal a profound concern for women..

I believe my work to represent the strength found in all women,
regardless of race, religion or sexuality. My work exposes the vulnerability of
our imperfections through the use of texture and mark making. And through my
blending of color I am able to bring to light the inner beauty all women
possess.

Why do you
think men have until recently exercised dominance in the plastic arts?

I think men have exercised a dominance EVERYWHERE, the arts included. It
would be easy to blame Religion for our patriarchal society but in all fairness
I think women are just as much to blame. For far too long we have allowed
ourselves to be doormats and not taken advantage of our own creative power. As
a woman and a professional artist, I believe it is my responsibility to
intentionally participate in the revolutionary, RELEVANT, change in gender equality.

Would you
agree that the creative process—whether in painting, writing, dance or theatre—is
necessarily a sort of adventure into the self, into the intimate experiences,
fears, passions, tastes and thinking patterns of each creator?

One hundred per cent!!!

If someone
were to ask you to define your art, what would your answer be?

Emotionally charged, challenging, relevant and always honest.

In your
opinion what is the state of art today in the U.S.A. and more particularly in
Lancaster?

That depends a lot on the location. For example, New York City, the city
every artist wants to be able to say they have exhibited in: I feel it is
highly competitive and unless you are willing to buy your way in or you know
the right people your chances of representation are slim. Perhaps I am a bit
biased because I am still trying to fight my way into N.Y.C. That being said, I
feel incredibly fortunate to live in a city that is incredibly supportive of
the arts. With over 30 galleries and First Friday receptions every month
Lancaster continues to grow her art community.

Is there any
predominant tendency?

I will let the viewers answer that question.

Do you feel
that your art is taking a new direction? Does it take you there thanks to its
own impulse or are you calling the cards?

I make it a habit to let my work lead me. I have learned the hard way. I
just end up getting in the way of myself if I try to take over. I believe my
work to be evolutionary and always autobiographical.

Do you practice
any routine as a warm up for painting—yoga, zen, breathing technique, a special
time and place—or do you paint only when the mood hits you?

In the beginning of my journey I would paint merely when I felt inspired.
I no longer have that luxury. With more and more of a demand for my work, and
scheduled exhibitions 12 months out, the creative process has now become a
discipline. In the words of Picasso…”when inspiration shows up, it had better
find you working.”

Have you
published anything on your art?

This is the third year in a row I have been picked up by North Light
Publishers, winning an international mixed media competition for publication in
a hardcover coffee table art book. The book is scheduled to be released in
September of this year with the public unveiling of my winning piece in October
at Elmwood Gallery for the Arts in Buffalo, NY. The title of the book is “Incite
VII: Color Passions” and will be available on Amazon.